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Mental Competence and Legal Issues

Mental Competence and Legal Issues. Barry S. Fogel, MD Brigham Behavioral Neurology Group Harvard Medical School. Themes of This Presentation. Executive Function and Metacognition Why Assessors May Disagree Neuropsychological Testing versus Performance in a Natural Setting

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Mental Competence and Legal Issues

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  1. Mental Competence and Legal Issues Barry S. Fogel, MD Brigham Behavioral Neurology Group Harvard Medical School

  2. Themes of This Presentation • Executive Function and Metacognition • Why Assessors May Disagree • Neuropsychological Testing versus Performance in a Natural Setting • Specific Issues • Financial decisions • Testamentary capacity • Healthcare proxies • Guns • Voting • Assessing Legal Competence • Communicating the Findings of an Assessment • Advice

  3. First Principles – (1) • Competency is a legal determination; decision-making capacity is a medical one. • Capacity is task-specific and context-specific, and can fluctuate over time • Executive function and metacognition are essential to instrumental functioning – including competency. They can decline at disparate rates. • Criteria for competency should be more stringent when the patient is making a bad decision • Clinical observations and neuropsychological testing have complementary roles in competency assessment

  4. Principles – (2) • Competency-related issues should be addressed as early as possible in the course of a neurodegenerative disease – preferably before the patient has the full syndrome of dementia • Communication about competency-related issues should be clear, redundant, and multimodal • Formal legal proceedings to establish incompetency usually are not necessary if the right plans are made early • Trusts, durable powers of attorney, healthcare proxies and other mechanisms offer more flexibility • More formality is needed when more is at stake and there is more dissension among stakeholders • A patient often is competent to choose an appropriate proxy or surrogate decision-maker long after they are incompetent to make a particular type of decision

  5. Executive Function and Metacognition • Executive function is the most important cognitive factor determining performance of social and instrumental activities. • “Memory loss” is the most frequent presenting complaint – but usually not the biggest problem • This cuts across diagnoses: True for Alzheimer’s disease, non-Alzheimer dementia, traumatic brain injury, schizophrenia. • Patients with equal MMSE scores can show substantial differences in functional status. • The MoCA, Clock Drawing Test and EXIT are more sensitive to declining executive function

  6. The Role of Executive Function • Executive impairment, measured quantitatively by instruments such as the EXIT or neuropsychological tests (verbal and figural fluency, trail-making B, clock drawing, etc.), explains much of the variance in multivariate models of instrumental function. • However, education and culture influence scores for particular functions such as driving or managing finances, and current circumstances influence the quality of decision making.

  7. The Importance of Metacognition • People aware of their cognitive or sensory impairments will ask others (family and friends) for advice and assistance; people unaware of their limitations won’t ask for help, often refuse to accept help when it is offered, and may persist in doing things that have become dangerous. • People who know their driving abilities are impaired will curtail their driving. Normal old-old people reduce their driving miles per year. • Very low annual mileage – less than 3000 per year – is associated with a high risk of accidents

  8. Metacognition and Awareness of Deficits • Awareness of deficits (or, inversely, denial of deficits) is related to the same brain systems as metacognition. • Sensory impairments • Somatic diseases and disabilities • Behavioral abnormalities • Impaired judgment • Patients with bvFTD typically minimize or completely deny their changes in behavior and judgment.

  9. Metacognition and Safety • A recent driving simulator study showed non-demented old people with could improve their driving performance with training. The first step was acknowledging their impairments. • With adequate self-awareness, cognitively-impaired drivers can avoid situations such as poor lighting, heavy traffic, and fatigue that increase the risk of accidents. • Of all types of dementia, FTD has the strongest association with dangerous driving, and behavioral changes can make driving dangerous at a time when an MMSE might be normal, or only slightly below normal.

  10. Cognition and Metacognition Are Partially Independent • AD - Patients with relatively more right hemisphere and frontal involvement are more likely to be unaware of their cognitive deficits (or deny their significance) • FTD – Patients with the behavioral variant are most likely to have impaired metacognition. • VaD – Metacognition is most impaired with multifocal cortical disease that involves frontal lobes and/or right parietal lobe.

  11. Drugs and Metacognition • Some drugs - e.g., benzodiazepines -- may cause cognitive impairment accompanied by denial of impairment. • Other drugs - e.g., anticholinergics -- cause impairment of which the patient usually acknowledges (but doesn’t necessarily volunteer, or attribute correctly).

  12. Dimensions of Metacognition • Different dimensions of metacognition have different anatomy • “Feeling of Knowing” – inferior frontal lobes • Confidence in one’s knowledge – right parietal • The biggest practical problem, high confidence in wrong answers, may be more common in cortical dementias like AD than in subcortical dementias, and is worst of all in FTD. • Metacognition, or awareness of deficits, is greatest in the behavioral variant of FTD, where patients often acknowledge no problem at all despite major changes in functional performance. • In FTD patients impaired awareness of deficits correlates with atrophy of the the right posterior superior temporal sulcus, adjacent to the TP junction

  13. Initial Clinical Assessment of Metacognition • Before and after concluding clinical or laboratory testing of cognition, hearing, or vision, ask the patient whether they are having trouble in that area, or what they think their tests will show. • Explain test results, then ask again. • If the patient initially is reluctant to accept the findings, give them a written report and ask again on the next visit. • Ask the family if the patient’s behavior reflects awareness of limitations.

  14. Increasing Levels of Metacognitive Deficit – (1) • Acknowledges impairment and appreciates its implications but doesn’t act consistently with that awareness and appreciation • Acknowledges impairment but doesn’t appreciate its implications • Acknowledges impairment upon failing a test, before the results are explained, and then appreciating implications • Acknowledges impairment upon failing a test, but does not appreciate implications

  15. Increasing Levels of Metacognitive Deficit – (2) • Acknowledges impairment upon failing a test, but only after results are explained • Acknowledges impairment when results of a test are explained, but (poorly) excuses the poor performance • Acknowledges impairment only after repeated explanations • Acknowledges impairment only after vigorous confrontation • Denies impairment despite all efforts.

  16. Formal Testing of Metacognition • Neuropsychological testing including metacognitive measures. • Formal: Memory tests that ask subjects how sure they are of their answer. • Informal: Systematic observations and questions by the neuropsychologist • Occupational therapy assessment. • Comparison of self-rated, clinician-rated, and family-rated scales of cognition and everyday functioning.

  17. Metacognition Questionnaire (Buckley et al. IJGP 2009) • Ask patient and caregiver to rate change over the past three years in: • Remembering recent events, appointments, or where you put objects • Remembering the names and faces of friends and relatives? • Keeping your train of thought or finding the right words? • Finding your way around familiar places? • Operating gadgets, appliances, or machinery? • Keeping up with household chores, hobbies, and interests? • Memory performance in general?

  18. Why Assessors Disagree About Cognitive Capacity • Different performance criteria or thresholds for determining competence or functional independence. • Differences in testing methods. • Context-dependency of performance, especially when executive function is impaired. • Fluctuations in performance, especially those related to medical illness or mood.

  19. Comprehensive Quantitative Normed Standardized context May disclose unexpected severity of impairment Can be used to measure change over time Face validity Observed degree of benefit from contextual cues is relevant to clinical conclusions Results can be more persuasive to family or other interested parties Neuropsychological Testing v. Observed Performance

  20. Specialized Tests: MacArthur Competence Assessment Tool (MacCAT) • Focuses on capacity to make a decision about medical treatment or participation in clinical research • A vignette is presented to the patient that is tailored to the specific clinical decision • Ordinal ratings of understanding, appreciation of risks and benefits, reasoning, and ability to express a decision; psychometrics OK • No fixed cutoff for the judgment of competence • Useful in the clinical trials context – not so useful for clinical practice

  21. Specialized Tests: Financial Capacity Instrument (FCI-9) • 18 items in 9 domains assess capacity to make financial decisions • Broad scope, from making change to reading a bank statement to comparing investment options • Appealing face validity

  22. Specific Issues: Financial • Patients with dementia are at risk both for financial victimization and for self-inflicted financial injuries • Stakes are high when there is a lot of money .. and where there is very little • Examination of financial records such as credit card statements, brokerage account records or notices of overdue bills can provide documentary evidence of impairment – and can help establish a rate of decline

  23. Customizing Management of Decreased Financial Competence: Key Considerations • Stage of dementia and expected rate and pattern of cognitive loss • Expected needs for care and their cost • Whether there is someone trusted (and trustworthy) to make financial decisions on the patient’s behalf • Assets and income available for the patient’s future care • Whether the patient is responsible for financial decisions that affect other’s welfare

  24. When There Are Significant Assets • “Smoke out” issues of trust and trustworthiness • Be vigilant with respect to potential financial exploitation – it sometimes is subtle • Involve a “neuro-aware” family therapist or social worker when denial is prominent in the patient or the family • The estates-and-trusts lawyer should be educated regarding dementia and related neuropsychiatric issues

  25. Testamentary Capacity: Ingredients • Know what a will is • Know what one’s assets are • Know the people who have a reasonable claim to be beneficiaries • Understand the impact of a particular distribution of the assets • No delusions that would affect the decisions made • Ability to express wishes clearly and consistently

  26. Signs Suggesting Testamentary Incapacity • Radical change from previous will(s) or previously stated intentions • Disinheriting of “natural” heirs • Decisions made in context of probable delusions, misperceptions, misunderstandings, etc. • Choices that disregard one’s personal history and reflect only one’s present circumstances • Special situations • No biological children • Suspicion of undue influence

  27. Reasons to Suspect “Undue Influence” • Physical dependency with caregiver as new beneficiary • Apparent sexual bargaining • Change in will instigated by a beneficiary • Changes made shortly before death

  28. Pitfalls in the Assessment of Testamentary Capacity • Focusing on diagnosis rather than functional capacity • Delusions per se do not imply incompetence • Poor test performance does not imply incompetence

  29. Healthcare Proxies, Living Wills, and other Advance Directives • Advance directives are designations made while a person is competent to decide: • Who should make medical decisions when they are incompetent in the future • What principles should guide those decisions • A competent choice of a healthcare proxy may be possible for a patient with quite advanced dementia • Prior knowledge of the patient and the proposed proxy may be necessary

  30. Philosophy Gets Real: Autonomy, Authenticity, or Best Interest? • What is the right basis for making a decision on behalf of an incompetent person: • What they thought they’d want under the circumstances when they were still competent? • What would be most consistent with their lifetime attitudes and beliefs? • What a caring and competent proxy thinks would be in their best interest? • Local law may dictate that clinicians follow the first option, but if not, the second and third options deserve consideration

  31. Guns and Dementia: Sobering Statistics • Older people are more likely to own guns than younger ones. • 80% of homicides committed by people over 65 are done with guns. • More than half of suicides committed by people over 65 are done with guns. • Patients with dementia are prone to depression – with the risk of suicide – and to paranoia – with the risk of violence in perceived self-defense

  32. Gun Ownership is Prevalent • 21-State VA study: 40% of veterans with mild to moderate dementia lived in homes where there was a firearm. • 21% of those with firearms kept them loaded • 61% stored their firearms in an unlocked location • Study in a university memory clinic • 60% of demented patients had a firearm in their home • 45% of the firearms were kept loaded • Gun ownership is more common among men, Southern and Western US, and rural areas.

  33. Firearm Screening is High-Yield • Incorporate gun-related questions into your standard new patient intake package • Query family if they are present, or if they are not but the patient consents • Utilize the usual face-saving maneuvers • Talk about potential future risks, e.g., those related to gun access during a transient delirium • Mention risk to others, e.g., grandchildren, if guns are carelessly left loaded and not secure

  34. When the Right to Bear Arms May Be Abridged by Plaques and Tangles … • Deal with guns as with other safety issues such as driving and living arrangements • Engage concerned family members to lock up, disable, or dispose of guns • If risk is imminent, hospitalize the patient (involuntarily if necessary) and have family or police remove the weapons from the home while the patient is in the hospital

  35. Competency to Vote • Relevancy of competency to vote in older voters with mild to moderate dementia has become more politically relevant recently • Studied with formal tests by Appelbaum and colleagues • Understanding of voting and ability to express a choice are preserved in the majority of patients • Political reasoning and appreciation of personal effects of election results are lost as dementia progresses • A novel form of “identity politics” • Ethical perspective

  36. Legal Competence • Competence for what? • Deciding on medical procedures • Making a will • Advance medical directives • Making financial decisions • Involvement in litigation • De facto standard is higher for “unreasonable” decisions. • Interviews with lay people show that they understand that competence is task-specific and that a person with dementia may be competent to make a healthcare decision but not a financial one, for example.

  37. Multiple Standards with Different Executive Requirements • Ability to understand the question and express a preference • Ability to reason about the question • Ability to express rational reasons • Ability to appreciate context and personal significance • Ability to conform behavior to expressed intentions

  38. Why Assessors Disagree About Competency • In practice, assessors of competence often disagree. • Assessors disagree least often about patients’ capacity to understand the issue at hand. • They disagree most often about patients’ appreciation of context and quality of reasoning. • Overall judgments disagree for any of these: • Disagreement about which dimensions of competence are important. • Disagreement about the measurement of individual dimensions of competence. • Disagreement about thresholds or cutoffs for impairment.

  39. The Bugbear: Disproportionate Executive Impairment • Disproportionate executive impairment can be found in FTD, Lewy body dementia, dementia of Parkinson’s disease, dementia associated with late life psychosis, chronic delirium -- and many other conditions. • Patients with these disorders can give rational reasons but make irrational decisions because of unawareness of inconsistency, and lack of appreciation of context. • The problem is especially severe when insight is lost. • Families, lawyers, and courts may need introduction to the concept of selective cognitive impairment, and executive dysfunction in particular.

  40. The Problem of Fluctuation • Fluctuating deficits are the rule in dementia • Intercurrent illness • Drugs • Stressful situations • Depression • They can produce intermittent incompetence including state-dependent treatment refusal • Consider “Ulysses contracts” for cognitively unstable patients scheduled for high-risk surgery.

  41. Preventing “Legal Emergencies” • Gray zones of competency can be anticipated based on the patient’s diagnosis. • Problems will always be worse in a crisis situation. • Therefore, durable powers of attorney, living wills, etc. should be done as early as possible in the course of the illness, when the patient still has insight.

  42. Communicating the Findings of Assessment • Identify the interested parties and the key issues -- disability, competence, financial risks, needs for support and assistance, driving safety. • Get permission to share information • Estimate the knowledge of the audience and set the stage if necessary -- with an explanation of executive function, need for supervision, course of illness, etc.

  43. Aids to Communication • Create a “roadmap” for the patient’s expected course, anticipating what practical issues might arise at different points along the patient’s course • Prepare a written summary of findings and implications. • Recommend readings, videos, websites, etc. • Deal early with issues of trust. • Refer patients and families to specialized resources

  44. Managing Declining Competency in Dementia Might Require: • A family therapist interested in caregiving and legacy issues • A lawyer with an estates and trusts specialty • A lawyer with a family law specialty • An eldercare specialist social worker with broad knowledge of both conventional and unconventional community resources • A therapist specializing with skill in managing caregiver stress • A neuropsychologist experienced in competency-related testing and in explaining results to lawyers and judges • A driving evaluation specialist, preferably one with access to driving simulation and/or telematics • An occupational therapist who makes home visits • A financial advisor • A medical ethicist

  45. Village-Building Advice • These various specialists will be more helpful if they understand how executive impairment, loss of self-awareness, fluctuation, context-dependency, and depression and/or psychosis can make patients with dementia different. • They are even more helpful if they’re available when you need their help. • You can play a role as an educator to build the knowledge of your human resources: Discuss your challenging cases with them • Introduce your resources to one another, and they’ll introduce useful colleagues to you. • Sharing challenging cases builds trust, and helps you understand your resources strengths and limitations • Past referrals of rewarding patients open doors to future referrals of difficult ones.

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